The original singer of the song "Love Song 1990

The original singer of "Love Song 1990" is Luo Dayou.

Luo Dayou (TayuLo), born July 20, 1954 in Taipei, Taiwan Province of China, Taiwan Province of Miaoli County Hakka family, ancestry Meixian District, Meizhou City, Guangdong Province, graduated from Taiwan's Chung Shan Medical College, Taiwan, China Taiwan, male singer-songwriter, musician, songwriter, writer.

In 1972, he joined a student band as a keyboardist. 1974, he composed his first song "Song". 1976, he formally devoted himself to commercial music creation. 1981, he made his debut as a record producer, producing the song "Childhood".

In 1982, he released his first solo album, The Literals, which broke away from the popular folk song style at the time, and led Taiwanese pop music to an unprecedented trend of criticism and introspection. He then released the album "Future Masters", an unprecedented critique of the nation, the current situation, tradition, and society.

Acting Experience

In 1974, he composed music for the Cloud Gate Dance Theater by Lin Hwai-min, a senior at Weidao Middle School. In 1976, he composed the song "Myth" and formally devoted himself to commercial music creation, and also composed songs for the movie "The Road That Never Ends".

1979, published the song "obsessed with waiting", "love song 1980", included in the first album "the classics"; the same year, composed and sang "lullaby", "blind and deaf".

After graduating from college in 1980, he worked in the radiology department of a hospital in Taipei, but eventually resigned to become a professional musician because his love for music was too much to part with. Composed the interlude "Whether", "The Same Moonlight" and the theme song "Wine is Dry" for the movie "The Wrong Ride". In the same period, he composed "The Story of Light Time", "Will Enter Wine", "The Endless Road", "Youth Dance" and "Deer Harbor Town".

In 1981, he made his debut as a record producer with the song "Childhood", and on April 21, 1982, he released his debut album in Taiwan, Zhijie. 1985, he collaborated with Zhang Aijia and Li Shouquan to create Tomorrow Will Be Better, and then left Taiwan for Hong Kong.